Chapter 25: Money, Banks, and the Federal Reserve System

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Fractional Reserve Banking System

A banking system in which banks keep less than 100 percent of deposits as reserves

M2

A broader definition of the money supply; It includes M1 plus savings account deposits, small-denomination time deposits, balances in money market deposit accounts in banks, and non-institutional money market fund shares

Security

A financial asset—such as a stock or a bond—that can be bought and sold in a financial market

Commodity Money

A good used as money that also has value independent of its use as money

Bank Panic

A situation in which many banks experience runs at the same time

Bank Run

A situation in which many depositors simultaneously decide to withdraw money from a bank

Quantity Theory of Money

A theory about the connection between money and prices that assumes that the velocity of money is constant

Asset

Anything of value owned by a person or firm

Money

Assets that people are generally willing to accept in exchange for goods and services or for payments of debts

Reserves

Deposits that a bank keeps as cash in its vault or on deposit with the federal reserve

Why did shadow banks experience such great losses in the financial crisis of 2007-2009?

Highly leveraged; subjected to large gains and large losses

store of value

If you do not use all of your dollars to buy goods and services today, you can hold the rest to use in the future

Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC)

Insures deposits in most banks up to a limit ($250,000); Greatly reduced bank runs because it reassured all but the largest depositors that their deposits are safe, even if their bank goes out of business

What are the three parts of the shadow banking system?

Investment banks, money market mutual funds, hedge funds

Discount Loans

Loans the Federal Reserve makes to banks

What are the 4 functions of money?

Medium of Exchange, Unit of account, store of value, standard of deferred payment

M X V = P X Y

Money Supply X Velocity of Money = Price Level X Real Output

standard of deferred payment

Money allows people to borrow and lend, Value of money depends on its purchasing power

Fiat Money

Money, such as paper currency, that is authorized by a central bank or government body and that does not have to be exchanged by the central bank for gold or some other commodity money

Required Reserves

Reserves that a bank is legally required to hold, based on its checking account deposits

Excess Reserves

Reserves that banks hold over the legal requirement

Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC)

The Federal Reserve committee responsible for open market operations and managing the money supply of the United States

Monetary Policy

The actions the Federal Reserve takes to manage the money supply and interest rates to pursue macroeconomic policy objectives

Velocity of Money

The average number of times each dollar in the money supply is used to purchase goods and services included in the GDP

Open Market Operations

The buying and selling of treasury securities by the Federal Reserve in order to control the money supply

Federal Reserve

The central bank of the United States

Discount Rate

The interest rate the Federal Reserve charges on discount loans

Required Reserve Ratio

The minimum fraction of deposits banks are required by law to keep as reserves

M1

The narrow definition of the money supply; the sum of currency in circulation, checking account deposits in banks, and holdings in travelers checks

Securitization

The process of transforming loans or other financial assets into securities

Simple Deposit Multiplier

The ratio of the amount of deposits created by banks to the amount of new reserves

What happens when banks lose reserves?

They make less loans and money supply contracts

What happens when banks gain reserves?

They make more loans and money supply expands

4 qualities of money

acceptable, standardized quantity, durable, valuable, divisible

unit of account

each good has a single price instead of many; a way of measuring value in the economy

Federal Reserve Act of 1913

intended to put an end to bank panics

Shadow banking

non-bank financial firms that raise money from investors and lend it directly or indirectly to firms and households—a function that at one time was exclusively the domain of commercial banks

Hedge Funds

raise money from wealthy investors and use sophisticated investment strategies that often involve significant risk

Investment banks

rarely accept deposits, provide advice to firms issuing stocks or bonds or considering mergers, buys mortgage bundles and resell them to investors

Medium of exchange

sellers are willing to accept it for goods or services

Money Market Mutual Funds

sells shares to investors and use the money to buy short term securities such as Treasury bills and commercial paper issued by corporations

Why do governments sometimes expand money rapidly?

they want to spend more than they've raised through taxes


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